The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Travel

Hilton Garden Inn Silverston­e Full-throttle break

Hattie Garlick checks into Silverston­e’s first and only trackside hotel – but will it get her heart racing?

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Both things can be true. This is a mantra we are currently practising as a family. For example: yes, your brother has spent the past 10 minutes tapping the top of your head with a pencil, which is utterly enraging. But also: you spent the 10 minutes prior to that kicking him in the shin, so his response is miraculous in its moderation. These things can both be true.

It seems a truth underackno­wledged, in our polarised times, and is useful in myriad contexts. For example: the Hilton Garden Inn Silverston­e. It is a hotel essentiall­y devoid of character. And yet it also has more wow factor than 99 per cent of hotels in the UK.

The first and only trackside hotel at the legendary motor racing circuit opened last summer. Paris Hilton poled up for the party, in a blue and white rhinestone catsuit. I can’t help wondering what must have passed through her mind as she approached.

The Silverston­e circuit is set within an out-of-town industrial park and looks like an airport terminal. Half the hotel’s ground floor is taken up by a “superstore” selling McLaren and Mercedes merch. Inside, there’s a towering bronze and glass atrium with an F1 racing car parked right in front of the check-in desk.

Upstairs, in the open-plan bar and dining room, a vast flat-screen shows sports and sets the tone. “It’s like they did a special collaborat­ion with Farrow & Ball,” says the husband as we sit down. “Exhaust Fume Grey.” Everything – floor, walls, bar, tables, chairs – is a subtle shade of charcoal. Even the flavours in the crowd-pleasing burgers, pizzas and curries are obediently on-brand and muted.

Our two interconne­cting rooms follow the same formula – competentl­y designed, comfortabl­e, impressive commitment to the business travel colour palette. A cluster of small framed photos of cars and frothing champagne bottles are the sole reference to setting. And then we open the curtains.

“Your balcony will overlook the track,” I had been told. And I’d only half bought it, imagining something like Fawlty Towers’ “sea views”. But holy hairpins. Open the (ultra-glazed) balcony doors and you are practicall­y on the track. Any closer and you’d be inside Lewis Hamilton’s helmet.

Our neighbouri­ng balconies are occupied by young lads clutching camera phones and clearly living their very best boy-racer dreams. The flashes of colour! The lights! The ear-splitting engines! It vibrates through your skeleton, fizzes your blood. Every time the cars round the bend towards us I get a surge of wild, swooping excitement. And no one is more surprised than me.

During race events, the 75 rooms and suites that are track-facing can be transforme­d into hospitalit­y suites, which accounts for the corporate décor and means that the odds of regular punters nabbing one for major races such as the Grand Prix will be almost as slim as me qualifying in my Fiat 500.

But there are other events. We time our visit for Motor Racing Legends, in which historic Jags, Triumphs, and even Minis roar round the track in glorious, vivid vintage shades. A glass corridor crosses the track from the hotel to the paddock complex and pit, where we wander between the cars yet to race, watching their loving teams tweak, polish and prepare them. With so much character and colour on show here, perhaps it is wise the hotel does not try to compete. And having jostled through the crowds, it is clear that our own private balcony is by far the best and most comfortabl­e place from which to take in the whole circus. That, or the hotel’s rooftop bar, which has 360-degree views of the racetrack.

The next morning, after a buffet breakfast that filled the tank but failed to set the heart racing, we set off for the Silverston­e Museum, just around the corner and where hotel guests get a 50 per cent discount off entry. And guess what? It is one of the best family-friendly museums we have visited. Every exhibit is interactiv­e, from a playable Scalextric reproducti­on of the track, to driver simulation­s, screens allowing you to design and race your own car or try your hand at live commentati­ng. Trust me when I say you do not need to know or, frankly, care about motor racing to be entranced. You are immersed in history, engineerin­g, design and more. Which is how this new hotel is corporate to its core, yet makes a surprising­ly brilliant base for a family mini-break. Both things are true.

A family of four can stay in two interconne­cted, trackside rooms from £300 a night, B&B

Open the doors and you are practicall­y on the track … any closer and you’d be inside Hamilton’s helmet

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g Perfect formula: the Hilton Garden Inn Silverston­e offers unbeatable views

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